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Making Your Pitch Keep the pitch simple, and build it around the Guy Kawasaki Rule of 10/20/30: 10 slides, 20 minutes, nothing smaller than 30-point font. Remember that you are telling a story; you want a spokesperson who can bring the idea to life and get people excited. Practice pitching the idea before you take […]

Which Top Ideas to Pitch? The next stage is to consider how these ideas might be implemented by your organization. Look at the top ideas and say to yourself as the leader, “These are great ideas—how can we execute them?” The following questions will help you get to your answer: Can we get our teams […]

The Five Questions

The Five Questions Score your answers to each of the first three questions from 0 to 5. A 0 means that the idea being considered doesn’t move the needle on this question (or, in other words, is a no-go for the time being), while a 5 is a resounding yes. You should ask these five […]

The Ranking System

Before we start ranking I want you to think about group dynamics for a second. Ideally you will have somewhere between five and ten people participating in your ideation group. These people will be drawn from all divisions of your company, including, but not limited to, engineering, marketing, and executive. Some of them will be […]

Sharing and Grouping

At the end of the ideation part of the workshop, have the team members briefly talk through their individual ideas. Have them take their Post-it notes and place them on a flip chart or other surface that everyone can see. Get through this process quickly. You don’t need master’s dissertations. Start to group the Post-its […]

Sharing Homework Observations

Once everyone is settled into the meeting, it’s time to share what you’ve discovered. I generally give a quick recap of our area of focus, not about the ideas yet. I start off by asking the participants to share their own list of the assumptions and rules that define how the industry and organization operates. […]

Do Your Homework

Once you have assigned your Killer Questions, briefed your group, and set the date for the innovation session, it’s time for everyone involved to do observational homework. This is exactly what it sounds like. You need your team to get out of the office, into the real world, and make as many observations as possible […]

Preparing for Your Workshop

The ideas you generate in your workshop are only ever going to be as good as the people in the group. I want people of different ages, races, education levels, economic statuses, and beliefs to come up with an area of focus. Theoretically, I want twenty-three-year-old inner-city scholarship kids sitting next to corn-fed engineers three […]

Coordinating Your Workshop

So what do you need to know as the leader of an ideation workshop? A workshop has multiple elements—participants, Killer Questions, and so on—but at the end of the day, the quality of the ideas directly relates to your ability to create a highly functional, highly effective group. In the following series of posts I’m […]

Rule #1: Set a focus. The first critical error David and his group made was failing to focus their attempt to generate ideas. As we’ve defined in the FIRE method, focus is essential in order to give people a targeted, specific area of investigation. Pick one aspect of your industry or organization, and decide whether […]

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In Beyond The Obvious, you discover how to get back to asking the right questions – ones that lead to radical breakthrough innovation. Full of real-world examples, this book will change the way you operate, innovate, and create.

These questions will re-frame the way you see your products, your customers and and your organization. Whether you’re a company of thousands or a lean startup. Beyond The Obvious will give you the skills to create game-changing innovations.

I'm an award winning innovator of products and technologies that are used each day by 100’s of millions of consumers and businesses worldwide. Most recently I served as Chief Technology Officer for Hewlett-Packard (HP).

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Human beings are creatures of habit, so getting ourselves and our teams to think beyond the obvious is a challenge we face all the time. Phil McKinney is an innovation expert, and his killer questions and hit-the-spot anecdotes provide a great way to get out in front of opportunities we otherwise won't see.
Geoffrey Moore, author of Crossing The Chasm and Escape Velocity

In Beyond The Obvious, you discover how to get back to asking the right questions – ones that lead to radical breakthrough innovation. Full of real-world examples, this book will change the way you operate, innovate, and create. More about the book ...

About Me ..

I'm an award winning innovator of products and technologies that are used each day by 100’s of millions of consumers and businesses worldwide. Most recently I served as Chief Technology Officer for Hewlett-Packard (HP).More about me ...